Explosive New Tinder Details Revealed

A Bloomberg Businessweek writer who wrote about Tinder's early success is now lashing out against the makers of the popular dating app with an explosive new piece.

The reporter, Nick Summers, concluded that Whitney Wolfe, the woman who's suing the company behind Tinder over allegations that she was sexually harassed, wasn't just a high-level marketing executive there.

She was actually one of the app's co-founders -- a fact that other executives at Tinder tried to obscure once the app started becoming popular.

"Whitney Wolfe was part of the real creation of Tinder, and that deserves to be known," Summer wrote.

Summers revealed that when he profiled the company last year, a representative for Tinder initially told him that Wolfe was one of the co-founders of the app. But in his subsequent interviews with Tinder executives and employees, Wolfe's role in starting Tinder was whitewashed, seemingly because CEO Sean Rad and Justin Mateen, Tinder's chief marketing officer whom she used to date, wished to take credit themselves.

Now, former employees told Businessweek that Wolfe was integral to the company, growing its userbase by over 200 percent in a matter of weeks with her visits to college fraternities and sororities. Among other accusations, she alleges in her lawsuit that Mateen told her that having a female CEO “devalues” the app and "makes the company seem like a joke."

Something tells us Tinder is going to have a hard time coming back after these allegations of gross, awful sexism.

IAC, which owns Tinder, has suspended Mateen but denies her other claims.

Summer's portrayal of the company fits in with many of the accusations Wolfe made in her lawsuit against Tinder. She claims that Mateen called her a "whore" and a "little girl." She also claims that Mateen and Rad frequently made sexist and racist comments about other employees.